Albany Times Union

Coach’s play call costs job

Defensive coordinato­r Williams fired after blitz failed miserably

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

New York Adam Gase thought through the final agonizing moments of the New York Jets’ stunning loss and tried to not make a rash decision.

The coach got a little sleep before he headed to the team’s facility Monday morning — with the same conclusion he had Sunday night: defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams had to go.

“I just felt like that was the best thing for our team moving forward,” Gase said during a conference call. “Organizati­onally, we had a discussion this morning and we felt like this was the best move to make.”

Williams was fired after he inexplicab­ly called for an all-out blitz against Las Vegas on Sunday with the Jets seconds away from their first victory. Derek Carr heaved a perfectly placed 46-yard touchdown pass to Henry Ruggs III — who was in man-to-man, or Cover Zero, coverage with rookie cornerback Lamar Jackson — with 5 seconds left to lift the Raiders to a 31-28 win.

The decision was highly criticized by fans, media and even his own players. It left the Jets’ players, who only moments earlier were celebratin­g what appeared to be a win, in shock on the sideline.

The team announced it had “parted ways” with Williams, and assistant head coach/inside

linebacker­s coach Frank Bush would serve as interim defensive coordinato­r.

“I obviously wasn’t happy about that call,” a somber-sounding Gase said. “That was a heartbreak­ing way for our guys to lose a game. For that to happen in that situation, it’s just … we can’t have that happen.”

Gase said he spoke with CEO Christophe­r Johnson, general manager Joe Douglas and team president Hymie Elhai about what he thought should be done — and they agreed it was right to move on. Gase then told Williams about the decision during a nearly hour-long discussion.

“Obviously, he wasn’t happy,” Gase said. “But, that’s our profession.”

Team captain Marcus Maye took an uncharacte­ristic swipe at Williams after the game, saying that the defense should have been in a better call in that situation. Gase insisted Maye’s comments didn’t play a role in his decision.

Gase was surprised to hear the play call by Williams, and acknowledg­ed he has authority to overrule the defensive coordinato­r — but did not.

“I wish I would’ve,” Gase said. “Sometimes during a game, you’re talking through a bunch of situations and that comes up. I wish I would’ve called timeout, but I didn’t.”

The 62-year-old Williams had been the Jets’ defensive coordinato­r the past two seasons under Gase. The two had a minor clash earlier this season when Williams said the Jets’ scoring average on defense wasn’t just all on his unit — implying Gase’s struggling offense was also to blame.

Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams seemed to take exception to the defensive coordinato­r’s firing, using five facepalm emojis in a quote tweet of ESPN’S tweet announcing the move.

Williams was suspended a year by the league in 2012 for his role in the Saints’ bounty scandal.

The no-nonsense Williams has made a career of being an aggressive play caller, but the Jets have struggled this year while ranking 29th in total defense and 30th in scoring defense.

 ?? Bill Kostroun / Associated Press ?? Marcus Maye is dejected after the Jets were beaten by the Raiders on a 46-yard bomb with 5 seconds left while in man-to-man coverage.
Bill Kostroun / Associated Press Marcus Maye is dejected after the Jets were beaten by the Raiders on a 46-yard bomb with 5 seconds left while in man-to-man coverage.
 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? Gregg Williams’ unit ranked 29th in total defense and 30th in scoring defense this season with the Jets.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press Gregg Williams’ unit ranked 29th in total defense and 30th in scoring defense this season with the Jets.

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